Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

School leaders bear weight of gauging threats

Officials have access to U.S. expertise, but final say theirs

- CAROLYN THOMPSON

School systems nationwide rely on high-level expertise from the U.S. Secret Service and others as they work to stay vigilant for signs of potential student violence, train staffs, surveil social media and urge others to tip them off.

When it comes to how to respond to a possible threat, however, it’s the local educators who make the call.

In the Nov. 30 shooting at an Oxford Township, Mich., high school, authoritie­s say the 15-year-old student charged in the deaths of four peers was allowed to remain in school despite troubling behavior including a drawing of a handgun and a person with bullet wounds. The school’s handling of the student before the shooting is among topics under investigat­ion.

Security experts and school administra­tors say there is detailed guidance to help schools recognize concerning behavior and when to intervene. But exactly how to respond, including whether to remove students from school property or involve law enforcemen­t, is for school officials to decide in each individual case.

Educators routinely assess how to deal with behavior that can range from mentions of weapons in social media posts to students “joking” about bomb threats, all while weighing safety concerns against a student’s right to an education.

“There is no such thing as the perfect school safety and crisis response protocol,” said Stephen Brock, a lead author on the subjects for the National Associatio­n of School Psychologi­sts’ curriculum.

Widely accepted best practices for threat assessment have been adapted from Secret Service guidance developed in the years since the 1999 Columbine school massacre. The agency’s National Threat Assessment Center recommends that multidisci­plinary teams of school administra­tors, security and mental health profession­als be establishe­d to assess whether a student would be helped by counseling, should be reported to police, sent back to class or something in between.

To set blanket policy — for example, always sending students home for certain acts — would be to go backward to an era of zero-tolerance policies, when everyone was punished but few students got help, said Lina Alathari, chief of the Secret Service National Threat Assessment Center.

“You have to rely on your assessment to guide your response, which is why this multidisci­plinary approach is so important. You want the mental health perspectiv­e, but you also want the [student resource officer] perspectiv­e because they will bring that operationa­l, investigat­ive mindset to ask the questions, whether something is an imminent risk or not,” she said.

Michael Lubelfeld, superinten­dent of North Shore School District 112 in Highland Park, Ill., described an “all hands on deck” approach on whether scuffle between students is a serious threat.

He recalled a scenario in one of the district’s middle schools last year, in which a child was overheard “indicating he wanted to do a violent act.” It was close to the end of the day, with little time to investigat­e. So he summoned police, who arrived in force.

“It was unsubstant­iated, but we didn’t have time to really do a thoughtful investigat­ion,” Lubelfeld said, “so we basically called in the cavalry and then informed the community why we did it.”

“I would rather overreact,” he said, “and I can take the criticism for that.”

The Michigan attack came only hours after the defendant, Ethan Crumbley, returned to class after the school summoned him and his parents to discuss worrying behavior, including his drawing with the gun and the words: “The thoughts won’t stop. Help me,” according to a prosecutor in the case. The boy reportedly told a counselor it was part of a video game he was designing.

After the shooting, authoritie­s learned that his father had bought the gun that his son is accused of using four days later.

A prosecutor, in taking the unusual step of charging the parents with involuntar­y manslaught­er, said James and Jennifer Crumbley knew their son had access to the gun but didn’t ask him about it after being shown the drawing, and resisted taking him home from school after the meeting. They have pleaded innocent.

There are legal considerat­ions for schools, especially if a student’s behavior is not found to pose an imminent risk, said Melissa Reeves, a psychologi­st and co-author of the National Associatio­n of School Psychologi­sts’ curriculum.

If parents don’t agree with the school and the situation doesn’t seem to merit interventi­on from a social services agency, “our hands are tied because we are legally obligated to educate,” she said. “We can’t deny access to education.”

Districts have faced lawsuits from parents claiming that schools have overreacte­d and unfairly punished students for harmless remarks or actions or underreact­ed to tragic consequenc­es.

“You’re damned if you do, you’re damned if you don’t,” said Dan Domenech, executive director of AASA, also known as The School Superinten­dents Associatio­n. In this third school year disrupted by the pandemic, he said, students are acting out more than ever, further straining the people tasked with figuring out if a student is just blowing off steam or about to do harm.

Meriden, Conn., Superinten­dent Mark Benigni said

the district has gotten pushback for searching students’ bags, sending them home or involving police.

“The last thing I want to do is keep a kid out of school, I know they can’t learn when they’re not here,” he said. “But at the end of the day, my obligation is to make sure I’m creating a safe environmen­t, and I’m not going to apologize when I need to suspend a student.”

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